This seems like fun. I did not succeed in finding a picture of a present day personality that was not too obvious. So here is Alberto Giacometti captured by Richard Avedon. What I see is a man who wears stylish clothes because he needs the protection and comfort they give first. Only in a second instance is he concerned with the particularities of his clothing and with the way he appears in them publicly. I like to think this attitude is the reason why he comes across confident and with a certain amount of nonchalance. What I see through the dirtied trousers and rumpled jacket is someone with something on his mind; and that ‘something’ is surely not his appearing before a camera.
Many of the basics of casual dress are present. The tweed jacket is loosely cut and soft due to its construction and material, but also because of the demanding physical labor it has supported (I am not even sure whether this coat can be buttoned at all). The trousers are in an according full cut and sit high on the waist. The cloth appears to be cotton, which could be held to be not completely right. The pullover adds some pattern to the outfit and creates a frame for the shirt and tie. The shirt collar is cut low, not pressuring the throat, with the right amount of space for the tie’s askew knot. In hand a handkerchief or possibly bandana, or maybe simply a rag for some purpose other than dress. But carried as part of it all.
It seems to me that this display might be more important to us today than any picture of any well dressed man in a suit ready for business, for politics, for blogging. Dressing up is easier to get away with nowadays when you are wearing a suit and not casual clothing. In most cases a suit will immediately make you part of the group of suit wearing professionals, whilst the casual outfit consisting of a dress shirt with a classic cut jacket and proper cut trousers, worn with a tie, will set you apart further from the jeans and polyester wearing crowds of today than a suit does, because somehow you will remain part of that crowd.
More important and maybe the most valuable lesson to be learned here is a more fearless way of dressing, i.e. of dressing up without being overly cautious for wear and tear, creases, correctness, originality, etc. Maybe this is not the hailed studied carelessness you read about often, in fact something closer to an unstudied carelessness, yet something I wish I had and saw more.
SQ: 8/10